this post was submitted on 28 Jun 2023
-20 points (23.7% liked)
Lemmy
2172 readers
64 users here now
Everything about Lemmy; bugs, gripes, praises, and advocacy.
For discussion about the lemmy.ml instance, go to [email protected].
founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I've been saying this for a few days now, but alas! Downvoted, scoffed. I just don't get it. I am not advocating for anything other than true decentralization, which is broken in more than one way with the lemmyverse. Defederation is not even the issue. No, I don't want nazi communities. No, I don't have anything against admins. I just want to see the system work as it's touted to work. People are so protective of their communities, and rightfully so, but we need to think hard about the differences between moderation and exclusion. One can foster a safe community, the other will just isolate.
I was talking about this with friends. I think that as the userbase grows, we'll reach the point of specific communities being like the "main" sub for that topic. Like, right now I'm subbed to 5 or 6 different "games" or "gaming" communities. Eventually, I think whichever instance ends up with the largest one will essentially become that default you're looking for.
That said, I don't think forcing it by collapsing alternate communities on different instances into one is the right way to proceed, because that may not be inevitable. I mean, maybe the [email protected] culture is different enough from the [email protected] one? We had r/games, gaming, truegamers, gaming4gamers, girlgamers etc etc on reddit, you know?
tldr: I think that, while communities for specific topics slowly shifting towards one mega-community seems likely, there's a space for different smaller ones with different moderation and culture here too.